Syrian violence contributed to a sharp rise in
the number of journalists killed for their work in 2012, as did a series of
murders in Somalia. The dead include a record proportion of journalists who
worked online. A CPJ special report

Almost half of the 67 journalists killed worldwide in 2012 were
targeted and murdered for their work, research
by the Committee to Protect Journalists shows. The vast majority covered
politics. Many also reported on war, human rights, and crime. In almost half of
these cases, political groups are the suspected source of fire. There has been
no justice in a single one of these deaths.

The tortured
and decapitated body of 39-year-old María
Elizabeth Macías Castro was found on a Saturday evening in September
2011. It had been dumped by the side of a road in Nuevo Laredo, a Mexican
border town ravaged by the war on drugs. Macías, a freelance journalist, wrote
about organized crime on social media under the pseudonym "The Girl from Laredo." Her murder, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, was the first in which a journalist was killed in direct
relation for reporting published on social media. It remains unsolved.

Three years ago, on November 23, 2009, 30 journalists and two
media workers were brutally
killed in the southern Philippine city of Maguindanao while travelling in a
convoy with the family and supporters of a local politician. To this day, not a
single suspect has been convicted, though local authorities have identified
close to 200. The botched trial
has been stalled with procedural hurdles. Victims' families have been
threatened and key witnesses have been slain.

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New York, November 8, 2012--Authorities in the Philippines must immediately investigate the shooting death of radio journalist Julius Cauzo and bring the perpetrators to justice, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

Approximately 30 journalists are targeted and murdered every
year, and on average, in only three of these crimes are the killers ever brought
to justice. Other attacks on
freedom of expression occur daily: bloggers are threatened, photographers
beaten, writers kidnapped. And in those instances, justice is even more rare.
Today, the Committee to Protect Journalists joins freedom of expression
advocates worldwide in a 23-day campaign
to dismantle one case at a time a culture of impunity
that allows perpetrators to gag journalists, bloggers, photographers and
writers, while keeping the rest of us uninformed.

On Tuesday, the Philippines Supreme Court issued a temporary
restraining order stopping the government from enforcing the Cybercrime
Prevention Act of 2012 which President Benigno Aquino III signed into law
last month. The court, in full session, ordered that oral arguments for and
against will start January 15. And it gave the government 10 days to respond to
the many petitioners seeking to declare the law unconstitutional.

In a notoriously litigious country like the Philippines, it's
bewildering that the government coupled a law targeting so-called cybercrimes like
cybersex, child pornography, identity theft, and spamming with the hoary
and over-used concept of libel. And no matter how abusive those crimes may be, it's
an even bigger mystery why the government felt it should suspend its lengthy heritage
of due legal process by giving the Department of Justice power to shut down
websites and monitor all online activities without a warrant.

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Bangkok, September 5, 2012--Philippine authorities must immediately
investigate the murder of a radio journalist, establish the motive, and bring
the perpetrators to justice, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

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CPJ is monitoring with concern the news coverage of Baker Abdulla
Atyani, a Pakistan-based Jordanian Al-Arabiya TV journalist, and his two
Philippine crew members, Rolando Letrero and Ramelito Vela, who have been
unaccounted for since June 12.

Atyani, Letrero, and Vela left their hotel in Jolo, in the
southern Philippines, to interview a commander for the militant Abu Sayyaf, a
banned Islamic separatist group in the region, according to local and
international news reports. The three refused offers of a security detail from
local authorities, the reports said.

They have not returned. Various news accounts report them as "missing," "kidnapped," and a link between Abu Sayyaf and Al-Qaeda.

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Some
weeks ago, the body
of Esmail Amil Enog was found. The corpse had been chopped to pieces and then thrown together in a sack.
Enog was a witness in a grisly massacre in November 2009, which took the lives
of 57 people, 32 of them journalists, on a stretch of lonely highway in the
southern Philippine province of Maguindanao. It was the single largest attack
on journalists in the world.

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The
climate of impunity that fostered the November 23, 2009, massacre of 57
people, including 32 journalists, is alive and well not only on the southern
Philippines island of Mindanao, where the massacre took place, but in all of
the country. The revelation that the brutalized body of a key witness to the
killings, Esmail Enog, was found two months after he had gone missing is an
indicator of that. Enog testified last year that he had driven gunmen to the
site of the November massacre, news reports said. The killings wiped out almost
an entire generation of journalists in the region.

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New
York, May 8, 2012--Authorities in the Philippines must investigate the murders
of two journalists in the past two weeks, determine the motive, and bring the
perpetrators to justice, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

CPJ's María Salazar-Ferro names the 12 countries where journalists are murdered regularly and governments fail to solve the crimes. Where are leaders failing to uphold the law? Where are conditions getting better? And where is free expression in danger? (4:46)

Romeo Olea's unsolved murder is tragically typical of
media killings in the Philippines. Before his death, the radio commentator had
received anonymous threats over his reports on local government corruption.

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The investigation into the notorious murder of muckraking
Philippine journalist Marlene
Garcia-Esperat in Mindanao is now seven
years old. A separate hunt for conspirators in the January 2011 killing of
Palawan radio journalist Gerardo
Ortega is just getting started. The Regional Trial Court in Puerto Princesa
City issued arrest warrants against three suspects in the Ortega case on
Tuesday, and one has been arrested, according to the local Center for Media
Freedom and Responsibility. But both cases should already have been solved.

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New York, March 13, 2012--After reviewing evidence in the 2011 killing of journalist Gerardo Ortega, the Philippine Department of Justice on Tuesday recommended that murder charges be filed against
ex-governor Joel Reyes in the local courts, news
reports said. In doing so, the department reversed an earlier decision not to pursue charges against Reyes.

Although the accused triggerman, Marlon Recamata, named Reyes
in the murder, a June 2011 Department of Justice investigation found his statement
unsubstantiated, news reports said. Ortega's supporters submitted new evidence
a few weeks later and petitioned for the department to re-investigate, reports said. After reviewing the evidence, the department issued a
recommendation on Tuesday for murder charges to be filed against Reyes in the
Regional Trial Court of Puerto Princesa City, according to news reports.

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New York, March 12, 2012--Philippine authorities must
immediately launch an investigation into the shooting of journalist Fernan
Angeles, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today. CPJ is investigating
the motive in the attack, which left the journalist hospitalized in critical
condition today.

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The global rate of unpunished murders remains stubbornly high at just below 90 percent. Senior officials in the most dangerous countries are finally acknowledging the problem -- the first step in what will be a long, hard battle. By Elisabeth Witchel

Nearly two years since 32 journalists were murdered, the fight for justice has both intensified in rhetoric and bogged down in technicalities. Without a greater commitment of resources, the litmus test is one the Philippines could fail. By Shawn W. Crispin

Despite high levels of press and Internet freedom, provincial journalists worked under constant threat of reprisal. Two broadcast journalists, Gerardo Ortega and Romeo Olea, were shot and killed for their reporting. Both cases were unsolved by year's end, underscoring the country's third worst ranking on CPJ's 2011 Impunity Index, which calculates unsolved journalist murders as a percentage of a country's population. The vow of President Benigno S. Aquino III to reverse the trend went unfulfilled as legal proceedings in the 2009 Maguindanao massacre, in which 32 media workers were ambushed and slain, stalled amid numerous defense motions to disqualify witnesses and suppress outside scrutiny. In another high-profile case, an appeals court denied a dismissal motion filed by two government officials accused of plotting the 2005 murder of reporter Marlene Garcia-Esperat. Although the decision cleared the way for arrests, the long-running prosecution has been beset by delays. Press advocates were critical of a new freedom of information bill, which they said would curtail access to official documents.

Bangkok, January 6, 2012--The Committee to Protect
Journalists condemns the shooting death of Philippine radio commentator and
community newspaper publisher Christopher Guarin and calls on authorities to
bring the perpetrators to justice quickly.